Monthly Archives: February 2009

A Whirlwind Romance: Part 8, The Happily Ever After

Sorry about the late posting. Computer issues (just today I had two blue-screens and a downed server), a paper mache project, hunting for hidden treasure at the library, and my long over-due return to running all conspired against me this week. It was just too hard to tear myself away from the present. To reward you for you patience, I now present the conclusion to my whirlwind romance – on a Saturday!
Enjoy.

If I had to sum up the next couple of weeks in one word, it would be “intense”. We were In Love on Fast Forward. W and I discussed it all: past, present and future. All of the getting-to-know-you that might unfold over the course of months and years in a normal courtship was being compressed into a short series of teeny-tiny calendar boxes.
I think we both knew that this level of intensity was nothing ordinary, but we felt compelled to literally bear our souls to one another. I may not have understood all that was happening, but I knew that God was at the helm. That faith gave me the ability to let things unfold on their own (breakneck) pace. And I not only grew to know W better over the course of those days, but I felt like I was gaining better insight into myself.
Then eighteen days after our first date, something happened that changed the very fabric of our relationship: I had a birthday and turned twenty. This was a teen-romance no longer.
W took me to an elegant Italian restaurant to celebrate. It did not escape my notice that this was the very place some good friends of ours had become engaged just a few weeks earlier. At the end of an incredibly romantic dinner, he handed me my birthday present.
It was in a little box.
From a jewelry store.
It was a new watch.

When I got home I asked my mom if she’d like to see my birthday gift and held up my left arm. Her eyes settled on my ring finger before moving down to my wrist.
“Oh. That’s nice.”
She was bitterly disappointed. I tried to tell her that we had only been dating for a couple of weeks, but she knew.
She just knew.
To tell the truth, as much as I loved that watch, I was a little disappointed as well.

The following Saturday, my boss (and friend) was getting married on a steamboat. W and I would have to drive for over an hour to get to the dock. He wanted to make sure that we left early, just in case there was traffic. In his haste, we ended up being nearly an hour ahead of schedule. We decide to stop at the LDS Portland Temple and walk in the gardens.
They are always lovely, but the late summer color was particularly stunning that day. We strolled over to a large fountain and sat down.
W faced me and said, “Heidi, I love you and I know you love me.”
My heart started to pound.
He continued, “I know we haven’t been together very long, but I feel good about the direction our relationship is going. How do you feel?”
I could hardly speak. “I feel good, too.”
“I think we should start talking about marriage. Is that where you see us heading?”
“Yeah.”
“Next week, there is a big diamond sale going on. Would you like to go look at rings? Just to see what’s out there?”
“Sure.”
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a little velvet box. The sparkle dazzled my eyes as he pulled back the lid.
“Or I could just give you this one.”
And then he got down on one knee. He reached out and took my hand; we were both shaking. He blinked back his tears, looked me in the eye and asked, “Heidi, will you marry me?”
Once again I demonstrated my incredible articulateness as I replied, “Okay.”

We were married in that same temple right before Christmas.
It was just shy of six months from the day we met.

Remember J
? He was one of W’s groomsmen.
K was not in attendance.

We have been married for thirteen years. We have built a life, a home, a family. We’ve dealt with PMS, the IRS and the PGA on TV. We have had incredible happiness, heart-breaking sorrows and a whole lot of in-between. And we have faced it all side-by-side.
After all this time, I still thank God for sending W to me.
Best friends forever.

At Least I Didn't Jump On Her Couch

Angie of Antics with Angie interviewed me last week and she was not afraid to ask the hard-hitting questions, Barbara Walters style.
Anyone have a hanky?

Angie: If you had to lose one of your five senses, which one would you give up?
Heidi: There are times where I’ve been accused of losing all of my senses – or at least all of my sense. I just can’t pick one of the basic five, but I could give up my sense of direction? With a good GPS, I wouldn’t need it anyway.

Angie: If you were to be recognized by posterity for one thing, what would you like to be known for?
Heidi: Honestly, I would be thrilled if I was remembered for being kind. Kindness is a trait I really value in others and try to have myself.

Angie: If you could, in retrospect, change one thing about your childhood, what would it be?
Heidi: My childhood years consisted lots of tears, turmoil, and hurt. But I also was blessed with a lot of freedom. Time to play outside. To be a part of the wonder of sleeping out in the backyard or watching a garden grow. Finally being big enough to ride my bike to the store and buy candy with coins found in the couch.
And I know I was loved. Still am, as a matter of fact.
I don’t dwell on what went wrong. There is nothing I can change, and all of it: the good, the bad, and the ugly are building blocks that make me, me. Which is someone I happen to like.

Angie: If you could dine alone with anyone from any period in history, which person would it be?
Heidi: What meal? I think it would be great to have breakfast with Charles Dickens. Just for fun, I’d order oatmeal, only we’d call it gruel. I would allow him to have more than one bowl, if he said please.
If it was lunch, I’d have it with Laura Ingalls Wilder. We could take tin lunch pails full of biscuits and apple pie to an old school yard. After we ate, we could play catch with an inflated pig bladder.
I’d have tea (herbal for me, please) with Jane Austin, of course, complete with gossip over who would make good couples and how much money everyone makes.
Mark Twain would join me for a traditional southern dinner -fried chicken and ham and cornbread and greens. We’d talk about everything from modern forensics to who really wrote Shakespeare’s plays. We would not discuss religion.
Speaking of Shakespeare, he’d be great to share a decadent dessert with. But I’d have to warn him to watch his mouth. Let’s not be too bawdy, please. I am a married woman.
Is it odd that all of those people are writers?

Angie: If you could be the personal assistant to any famous person alive in the world today, who would you choose and why?
Heidi: I’d rather not assist any of them. Famous people are too temperamental.

I believe that everyone has a story to tell. I’d like yours. Will you let me interview you?
Here is what you do:
1. Leave me a comment saying, “Interview me.”
2. I will respond by emailing you five questions. (I get to pick the questions).
3. You will update your blog with the answers to the questions.
4. You will include this explanation and an offer to interview someone else in the same post.
5. When others comment asking to be interviewed, you will ask them five questions.
It will be just like being a celebrity. Except without the fame, money, multi-million dollar endorsements, paparazzi…

Oh, and speaking of celebrity, I called my big sister Saturday evening and indulged in a bit of sister-talk.
Is the title “big sister” insulting when you are adults? I don’t think I’d want to be referred to as big in any context. And just for the record she’s not big. Just older…than me. Is that any better?
Anyway, my big sister Julie mentioned that several of her church friends are enjoying my little romance. It came up at a meeting of their women’s group.
She said she almost felt like the sister of a celebrity.
[blushing] Hee!
So I’d like to give a shout-out to all my Bonanza readers. (Hi Kay!)
Yes, the town really is called Bonanza. No, Hoss does not live there. But Little Joe might. I’ll ask.
Thanks for reading. The next episode will be up later in the week.

A Whirlwind Romance, Part 7: Free Love

Catch up on the rest of the story here.

The next week was busy. I awoke early each morning and got myself down to the local college campus by 6:00 am. We had a tent set up there from which we would be preparing and serving the food for all 3500 conference attendees. My first job of the day was to turn on all of the ovens. From there I wiped down the tables, restocked the utensils and napkins, and began brewing coffee. Lots of coffee.
The conference was for distributors of a super-blue green algae nutritional supplement. And might I say, they were a tiny bit delusional strange different? Apparently, the local lake was the only place in the United States where this particular brand of algae was found, which drew these people in like some sort of hippie mecca. They frolicked in the nasty green scum at the edge of the lake and celebrated by having t-shirts made: “I swam naked in the algae today!” They smeared the goo on their faces and arms. They wore macrame halter-tops. (At least some of them did.)
Now this was back in 1995. Organic food was still a fringe idea. Most people hadn’t heard of free-range chickens or fair-trade chocolate. But these people had. Some of their dietary requests were new ideas to those of us serving them, but we adapted. The group was about 25% vegan, hence the large quantities of coffee. I’m not sure they ate anything that week other than coffee with soy milk and turbinado sugar, and super-blue green algae straight from the lake.
Now that I am older, wiser and more familiar with alternative food choices I have to say these people weren’t just vegans, they were super-vegans. Super blue-green vegans!
But you don’t care about that, you’re here for romance, right? It’s coming…
Breakfast began at 7:00 am. We finished serving dinner at 8:30 pm. I worked open to close with a two hour break in the middle of the afternoon. I wisely used this time to call W, write him love letters that I had no intention of delivering, and to plan our future.
Let’s see…it’s August now. We’ll say “I love you” in about a month. He’ll propose at Christmas and we’ll get married in the spring. I know that’s rushing things a bit, but when it’s right, it’s right.
The last day of the conference we set up a buffet picnic in the park. It was a beautiful day, hot but not too hot, with clear blue skies. Once the meal was prepared and people were serving themselves I found myself with a bit of free time. I sat down on a blanket to relax and soak up some vitamin D.
That’s when W drove up. I had decided to sell my car to my sister and he drove the 250 miles to pick me up. And pick me up he did! When he saw me, he raced up and grabbed me into a feet-off-the-ground hug and a kiss that causes several blue-greeners to burst into spontaneous applause.
It was good to be together again.
He hung out for the rest of the picnic, helping where he could, and then we headed back to my sister’s for the night. Julie spent part of the evening getting to know him before slipping off to bed early. Thanks, Jules!
We rented an unromantic movie, “Guarding Tess” with Nicolas Cage and Shirley MacLaine. Perfect for not really watching…
There we were, together on the couch with me leaning back into his chest and his arms wrapped around me. His lips softly brushed the top of my head and he whispered, “Heidi, I love you.” I turned to look at him and was touched to see tears in his eyes. His voice cracked a bit as he continued, “I’ve never said that to a girl before, but I do. I love you.”
Somehow, I was able to speak past the lump in my throat and reply, “I love you, too.”
H + W = Love
We not-watched the rest of the movie and then said goodnight. My brother-in-law was out out of town, so I quietly slipped into bed beside my sister. I tried not to wake her, but she stirred and groggily asked, “How was the movie?”
“Julie, he said he loved me.”
“Oh, that’s nice…” and she drifted back to sleep, unaware of what I had really said. But I lay awake for awhile, thinking.
He loves me.
To be continued…

The Psychic Physicians Network

So I took Newt to the ear, nose and throat doctor today. You know, for her ear infection. The one that was causing fever, pain, a horrible taste in her mouth, and irrational crying (that last one was me, not her). We took time out of our busy afternoon reading Harry Potter and playing Webk1nz (Newt ? homeschool) to go to pay a $25 copay and sit in uncomfortable chairs.
Incidentally, while we were waiting, I had a red-faced, sweat inducing, almost-peed-myself coughing fit and the nurse chose that very moment to call us back. I made her wait while I dug in my purse for an altoid. I did not rush.
So anyway, the slightly harassed looking nurse led us back to a secondary waiting room the exam room where we sat and waited some more. Good thing I brought our history work! (Heidi ? homeschool.) The doctor came in when we had one paragraph left until the end of the chapter. I should have made him wait.
He looked in Newts ear and confirmed my no-duh diagnosis of a raging infection.
So could someone please explain to me why he was just so. darn. happy. about it?
Well, Mrs. Heidi, Newt is getting to the age where she will have outgrown all of this stuff. And it has been awhile since her last infection. So, let’s give her some amoxicillin. Come back in, oh, about a month or so for a final hearing test. It should come out in the normal range and we will be able to close the book on all these problems! Newt, you’ve been a great patient. It has been fun taking care of you. Bye!
Did it somehow slip by him that we were there because of an ear infection? I guess he knows something I don’t.
But it does beg the question, when did Miss Cleo start giving out medical degrees?

Fever

If you are here for another chapter in my hot little romance, I’m sorry. The only hotness going on around here today is Newt’s fever.
No, she doesn’t have that yucky hacky thing that’s going around. She had that last week.
And then gave it to Mr. Frantic.
And then gave it to me.
That girl has never had trouble sharing.
Nope, I’m pretty sure that this fever is due to an ear infection. And I’m pretty much an expert on ear infections since this will be her 3,468th, or so. She has had surgery to put tubes in her ears four times. They usually pop out right about the time we pay the last bill.
In other news, the dog keeps vomiting on my carpet. The rawhide dog bones that she got in her Christmas stocking don’t seem to agree with her, but someone keeps giving them to her. And someone else keeps forgetting to throw them away. So someone has to lug out the carpet cleaner and hope that there are no chunks. In case you were wondering, I am someone two out of three times.
And yes, the dog got her own Christmas stocking.
Why?
1-The symmetry of four stockings looked better on the mantle.
2- We have an eight year old girl with a large nurturing instinct.
3- We will not be having any more children.
4- The dog is now our baby.
shasta
About the clover: Picnik did not have a fig leaf and I couldn’t show our baby’s hoo-hoo to the internet.
This is not that kind of blog.
I don’t know what kind of blog it is, but it is not that kind.
Speaking of sick, I mentioned that Newt shared her horrible hacking feverish cold with me, right? That is how I came to be sitting in church on Sunday with a major Nyquil hangover. Instead of listening I drew pictures with Newt.
She has a huge Harry Potter obsession going on right now so she drew Hedwig.
I drew Harry.
She drew Hermione.
I drew a creepy looking Voldemort wearing a party hat, holding a cupcake and shouting “I wanted chocolate! Avada kedavra!”
After that I decided that maybe I should go home and go back to bed.
I’m feeling much better now, thanks. Just in time for me to take care of ear infections and dog vomit.
Yup, I’m living the dream.

The next installment of A Whirlwind Romance will be up Friday.

A Whirlwind Romance, Part 6: A Gift

The story starts here:
Parts One and Two
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five

My stomach was doing flip-flops, and not because of dinner.
W brought a little hibachi grill to the beach and had used it to prepare a delicious meal; Teriyaki Chicken, in case you were wondering. I hadn’t been nervous while we were occupied with eating. Between bites, we talked about our families, movies we liked, and what we hated about our jobs.
Now full, we both leaned back on our blanket and watched the sun set over the Pacific Ocean. Fluffy pink clouds drifted lazily in in the golden sky, but I could not relax. A cool breeze blew off the water, but I was sure that it was not the cause of my goosebumps. The surf pounded on the shore, but I could scarcely hear it over the pounding of my heart.
I was sitting on a deserted beach at sunset with my boyfriend. It was incredibly romantic. Hence my nerves. This was a prime setting for our first kiss. I knew it was coming. He probably knew that I knew it was coming, and yet it didn’t come. The conversation died down as the sky darkened and the stars began to wink on.
My mind raced.
Maybe he doesn’t want to kiss me yet. He might want to take it slow. But he already asked me to be his girlfriend, that’s not very slow. Maybe I have bad breath. But we both ate the same thing. Oh no, what if I have BO?! That’s it! I probably have BO and he’s grossed out and he regrets asking me to be his girlfriend and he only asked because I was stupid enough to bring up my little niece and nephew’s dumb little argument and he only wanted to be friends in the first place but now we’ve gone and ruined it and he’s trying to think about what to do abou-
“Heidi, what are you thinking about?”
“Me? Nothing. I was just noticing the first few stars coming out. Aren’t they beautiful?”
“Yeah, they are.” But he wasn’t looking at the stars, he was looking at me. “You should make a wish.”
“I wish you would kiss me.” Dang it! Did I say that out loud? This was becoming a bad habit.
But then I couldn’t think anymore because he was leaning toward me, his gorgeous green eyes on mine. I could feel his warm breath on my face and I leaned in a bit and closed my eyes. Then his lips were on mine, soft and hesitant…
Much later in the evening, we packed up the blanket and he drove me home. After kissing goodnight one last time on my doorstep, I crept in the house. I quietly tiptoed past the sleeping forms of my nieces and nephew camping out on the living room floor.
Such little angels.
W saw each other every night over the next week. I was going to need to stock up on chapstick. When I was with him, everything seemed right, like I had found a part of myself I didn’t even know was missing. But each night, when I came home, I was a mess of confusion. I had had a couple of boyfriends before, even once believing that I was in love.
But I had never felt anything as powerful as I was now feeling for W. Except, it was too soon. We had only known each other for two months, only dating for one week. I couldn’t be in love, not now. Not yet. Even so, I couldn’t deny what was happening.
It was wonderful, exhilarating, and frightening.
So each night I poured my heart out in prayer asking for guidance, wisdom, and courage. And asking to understand just what in the world was happening to me. The only answer I received was a feeling of peace which carried me through until the end of the next night’s date.
At the end of that first week, W and I had to say goodbye, but only for about a week. My sister worked for a bed and breakfast that was going to be catering a large convention. They would be feeding 3500 people three meals a day for five days. I agreed to drive down and do some waitressing.
My sister lived about 250 miles from me, a good four hour drive. I planned to leave right after work; W came in to say goodbye shortly before my shift ended. When I walked out to my car I noticed that he had placed a dozen roses on the windshield with a note that simply read “I’ll miss you.”
Before I even reached the interstate, I was sobbing. There was simply too much emotion in my heart. I cried for over an hour as I drove along. Finally, I pulled to the shoulder and prayed.
“Dear Father in Heaven, what is wrong with me? Why am I crying? And what is this thing with W?”
The answer came to my heart. “It is a gift.”
At that moment, all of the turmoil I was experiencing ceased. I got back on the interstate with a light heart and practically flew the rest of the way to my sister’s house. When I arrived, I was so excited that I jumped out of the car and ran up her sidewalk. My heart raced as I pounded on the door and when she opened it I screamed, “Julie, I’m getting married!”
She grabbed me into a hug and screamed back, “To W? What?! When did he ask you?”
“He hasn’t yet. But he will.”
To be continued next week…

My Whirlwind Romance, Part 5: Naughty, Naughty

Don’t miss a single moment:
Parts One and Two
Part Three
Part Four

Remember how I told you that my social calendar was practically bursting with dates? Well, oddly enough, after the big double-date, my schedule completely freed up.
The surfer at work? New schedules came out and we didn’t have a day off together for the next month.
The cute fireman? His dad called to cancel our second date. The poor guy had to have an emergency appendectomy but didn’t want to stand me up.
Suddenly, I had nothing but time. And I knew who I wanted to spend it with.

A few days later, W came over to hang out.
At this point I knew I liked him.
And I knew he liked me.
But I didn’t know what that meant.
It was time to show him my fancy panties.

At least that’s what my visiting little nieces and nephew must have thought because they smuggled a pair out of my dresser drawer and…
Cut back to me and W in the front yard, washing my car. (What? I didn’t want him to get bored and my car was dirty.)
We hear the front door opening, giggling, and… wild, frenzied barking?
Suddenly, out runs Dudley, my family’s crazy terrier, and he’s acting even crazier than ever. He’s running, rolling in the grass and snapping at his tail. Only he couldn’t get to his tail because it was covered by, yup you guessed it, my fancy panties!

Indecent Incident reenacted by Shasta
photo reenactment

I was mortified, mor-ti-fied! I squealed, dropped my soapy wash mitt, and started chasing that dog. The problem was he didn’t appear to want to be caught.
I went left; he went right.
I zigged; he zagged.
I ran; he ran faster.
Finally, I cornered him by the rose buses. And then I grabbed my his those panties and started to pull them off. Only, they weren’t exactly empty.
Ewww!

No, it’s not that.
It’s much weirder.

I started to pull them off and out jumped a bullfrog!
A huge, bulgy-eyed, very relieved bullfrog. In my fancy panties. On the dog.
(Confidential aside: Welcome to my blog google pervs. Please consider getting some therapy. Thank you.)

photo reenactment

I screamed. W laughed. Really hard.
But I was in a pickle – should I laugh too? Or follow my instincts and go beat the living tar out of those children.
I decided to laugh, not only because it was funny, but more importantly, because I really liked him and I wanted him to think I’d make a good mother someday.
Oh yes, I had it that bad.
But don’t think for a moment that those terrible, rotten, nasty, and oh-so-creative kids were off the hook. I just held back my wrath until W went home.
[insert evil laugh here]
The next day W and I went on our first official date. When he came to the door to pick me up, who should greet him but two of the tricksters from the day before. This should be good.

Niece, right in front of W: “Aunt Hei-di! Your boyfriend is he-ere!”
Nephew: “He is not her boyfriend!” (My nephew was five, adorable, and hopelessly in love with me. He was planning on buying me a “white dress with diamonds” and marrying me when he grew up. The idea of me having a boyfriend was highly offensive to him.)
Niece: Yes he is!
Nephew: “NO HE IS NOT HER BOYFRIEND, STUPID-HEAD!”
Me: [highly embarrassed blush as I slink out the door]

Between the two incidents, the one with the dog was actually less horrifying. I mean, W wasn’t my boyfriend. I might want him to be… maybe. But did he want me to be his girlfriend? Just a few days ago we were H + W = BFF. Were we ready for just H + W ?

I got in the car and we set out on another long drive, this time to the beach. We listened to the radio and made small talk as he drove, but all the while I was silently praying “please don’t bring up my bratty little relatives…please don’t bring up my bratty little relatives…”
And then I opened my mouth to say something, I don’t know what, but not this, “So, did you hear my little niece and nephew arguing about if you were my boyfriend or not?”
Wha-? Did I just say that out loud?
He was kind of quiet for a moment.
Why did I say that?!
He wasn’t looking at me.
Was I insane?!
Finally, he spoke. Keeping his eyes on the road, W quietly asked me, “Who was right?”
Oh. My. I think that even my toes might have been blushing as I replied, “I don’t know.”
And then he reached over, took my hand and said, “Heidi, will you be my girlfriend?”
I answered with a brilliantly phrased, “Okay.”
But my smile? It was speaking volumes.
To be continued tomorrow (spoiler: first kiss coming up)…

**No frogs or dogs were injured in the events described. The children, however? They got an earful. And my thanks.**

My Whirlwind Romance – Part Four: Stolen Away

Need to catch up on the story?
Parts One and Two
Part Three

Meanwhile, W was having his own problems with the opposite sex. As these things usually do, it all started with a simple question.
“So, having spent the last two years without dating, I’ll bet you’re looking for a girlfriend, aren’t you?”
Isn’t that an obnoxious question? It was asked by an equally obnoxious girl; we’ll just call her K, shall we?
Concerned that she might be applying for the job, W answered, “Me? No, not looking for a girlfriend. I’m only looking to hang out and have fun. I’m planning on just dating. A lot.”
That seems like a good answer right? Well this girl was crafty.
“Who do you want to date?”
“No one in particular. Anyone, really.”
Can you see the corner the poor guy had painted himself into? Well, he didn’t, until…
“So W, how about me?”
That is how we both came to be stuck with dates we didn’t want.
Oh wait, I didn’t know about my big night yet, did I?
When I left you yesterday, J had told W about his intentions, but I was in the dark.
Until W, like a good BFF (to me), spilled the beans.
“What?! You’re kidding! He wants to plan a big special evening and ask me to be his girlfriend? What are we, fourth graders?
“I’m not going. I can’t go! But what will I tell him? I heard about your plan and I’m not really interested? I don’t want to hurt his feelings.”
In hindsight, that actually would have been the kindest thing to do, but remember, I was only 19 and pretty inexperienced with this kind of thing. Instead, I begged W to double with us, figuring I’d let J down easy on a different day. A day when he wasn’t scheming to spring a huge relationship question on me.
Somehow W was able to convince an unhappy J that we should double. After all, he didn’t want to be alone with K either.
I had to work the afternoon of the big date but had plans to go shoe shopping with my BFF after work.
As a sidenote: the shoes were for him, not me. And they were tasseled loafers. I had never spent time with a loafer-guy before. I was more of a boot-guy kind of girl. I wasn’t sure how to feel about that.
Anyway, the shoe shopping took longer than expected and I was in danger of being late for J.
W to the rescue again. He simply called J and arranged for us to pick him up. He wasn’t too happy to hear that we were hanging out together again, but what could we do?
W drove to pick up J first, then K. When he walked to her door, leaving me and J in the car, J told me that we were going ice skating before dinner.
“Oh, um… that sound like fun.”
But it didn’t. It sounded like torture. I am not exactly what one would call graceful. I had tried ice skating a couple of times and let’s just say, if we happened to run into Tanya Harding, I wouldn’t be in any danger.
Just then I noticed W helping K to the car. Helping her, because she was on crutches! She had sprained her ankle the day before, but didn’t say anything because she didn’t want W to have a reason to cancel. Oops! I guess that means no ice skating.
But when she heard the ice skating plan, she was all for it.
“That sounds like fun! I might not be able to skate, but I’d love to go anyway. I don’t mind just watching.”
If she was hoping that W would sit on the bench beside her, she would have to get used to disappointment. He thought skating sounded great. Oh joy.
On the hour-long ride into the city, J and I experienced our typical awkward silence. No matter, W and I had lots to talk about. BFFs! We weren’t trying to be rude to our dates, it just felt natural for us to connect with each other. We never ran out of things to say.
And then I realized, I was sparking.
Not for J, but for W.
My tasseled-shoe wearing BFF.
I liked him.
I like liked him!
And it looked like he liked me too.
Unfortunately, we weren’t the only ones who noticed. By the time we got to the rink, J had decided to sit on the bench and keep K (and her crutches) company while I laced up my skates and took to the ice with W.
Miracle of miracles! I could skate. With W at my side, I gracefully glided across the ice like I was born to it…
…for about three seconds, and then that stupid toe kick got in my way and I fell. No matter. Now that that was out of the way, things were sure to go better. Minding my toe-kick, I tried again. This time I actually got some speed going before a spectacular wipe out in a patch of melted ice. So much for trying to stay dry.
W was so sweet, helping me up and not even laughing much at me.
The next seventh time I fell, I had had enough. I complained to W that I had done nothing all night but fall and that it was ungentlemanly of him to stay on his skates. My pride demanded that he fall too.
“So won’t you please fall? For me?”
“Fall for you? Maybe I already did.” And then he skated away.
When he circled back, I whispered, “Hey, who’s on the date here, anyway?”
He glanced over at poor J and K who were glumly sitting on opposite sides of a bench, not talking to each other, and replied, “You and me.”
He was right…we consider that our first date.

Please don’t be hard on us for our treatment of J and K. We really didn’t mean to be rude. And contrary to the way it may appear, W never intended to try and steal me away (as if I belonged to J in the first place). He just enjoyed spending time with me. He liked the easy way we got along, that’s why he kept coming back to have lunch with me (or take me shoe shopping). And though we occasionally engaged in some innocent flirting, neither one of realized that we had feelings beyond friendship for each other until that night. Poor timing, maybe, but it all works out in the end.
Stay tuned.
More tomorrow…

My Whirlwind Romance Part Three: Engaged Before Our First Date

Read Parts One and Two of My Whirlwind Romance here.

Just like that, the cloud I had been living over seemed to dissolve. School and work were going well. I was making new friends. And suddenly, guys started to notice me.
Perhaps it was because I was no longer silently screaming “Are you talking to me, freak?”
Suddenly, I had gone from no plans to a full calendar.
A co-worker set me up on a blind date with a cute fireman.
A guy in the car stereo installation shop was planning to teach me to surf on our next day off together.
And J and I had gone out on a handful of dates.
He was cute. He had a real job – a police officer. He was sweet and nice and he really liked me. That’s why I couldn’t figure out why I felt nothing when we spent time together. Maybe I just hadn’t given him enough of a chance…
In addition to all the flirting dating, I was steadily developing another relationship.
A great friendship.
That guy from the dance, (let’s just call him W, shall we?) started coming in to buy CDs and look at car stereo equipment, just about everyday – right before my break. We got to know each other over daily lunches.
I didn’t have to try to come up with things to talk about. We just talked…or we didn’t and that was okay, too. When there was silence, it wasn’t awkward. It was comfortable. I found myself telling him things I’d never told anyone before, things that you would only tell your best friend.
W + Heidi = BFF
Everyday at lunch, I would ask him when he was going to let me drive his car. It was a running joke with us. He had just bought a new blah-blah-blah, whatever and he was quite proud of it. So of course, I started asking him to let me drive it. I didn’t really care, I just liked watching him squirm.
The first few times, he uncomfortably mumbled something about his insurance. But one day, he came up with an answer that silenced my questioning. That day, W told me that the only person he’d let drive this car would be a family member. His mom, dad, brother…a wife.
We both cracked up, joking about a girl who would marry a guy just to drive his car.
That must be some kind of girl!
That must be some kind of car!
It was even funnier when the kitchen sent out a little congratulatory dessert.
For our impending marriage.
I had an acquaintance that worked at the restaurant. An acquaintance that apparently misunderstood what he had overheard.
Red faced, I laughingly explained that we were just friends.
And then he asked me out.
I was becoming entirely too popular.
All of these other dates couldn’t fail to come to the attention of J. We were obviously not exclusive. And our time together was not physical; we never went beyond hand holding. In fact, the only difference between a date with him and lunch with W was the awkwardness that happened on a date.
Shortly after my and W’s ‘engagement lunch” J asked me to go into the city with him. His exact words were, “Heidi, I have to go to Portland later this week. Want to go?” I assumed I was accompanying him on an errand, and agreed. I thought I’d hang out with him one last time, to see if there was a spark. Or even a spark of a spark.
I might have thought this was just an ordinary date, just like the others, but J had other plans. He told W that he felt it was time to move things along with me. He was going to plan an entire evening of special events. At the end of the night, he was going to ask me to stop seeing other guys and be his girlfriend.
To be continued tomorrow…

Romantic Recap

Valentine's Aftermath

It’s Valentine’s week and love is in the air, causing flushed cheeks, sweaty palms, shortness of breath, and incoherent thinking.
On second thought, maybe it’s a virus.

Newt has a fever and is having to miss her co-op’s Valentine’s Party today. And I will be nursing her back to heath with Gatorade and Harry Potter. (We only have about 100 pages left until the end of book number four.)

But as promised, this week will be the week that I finish sharing all the sordid details of the beginnings of my love affair with Mr. Frantic.
However, today is like one of those recap shows where you don’t learn anything new, but you hope watch anyway. It’s been so long since I posted part one and two of my story, that I decided to repost them today. New dirt details tomorrow.

A Whirlwind Romance: Part 1

I was nineteen. The past few years had been spent in the painful chrysalis of trying to figure out who I was. I made mistakes. And I suffered.
It had taken some time and a badly broken heart, but I learned that I was a daughter of God and He loves me. That knowledge was everything. I started behaving more like it.
One warm May evening in 1995 I decided to go to a church dance. I don’t know why I wanted to go. Because even though I had decided to make Christ a part of my life, I still had some misgivings about the other people my age at church. The girls seemed cliquish and the guys were weird. Really weird. And nerdy. And weird.
I did not like them.
So no one was more surprised than I was when I started getting ready to go to this dance. I carefully picked out my outfit. One that said, “I’m cute, friendly, and not interested in any of you weirdos.”
In case you are wondering an outfit like that looks like, I lay it out for you:
Black Doc Martins, faded Gap jeans, and a sheer short-sleeved sweater with a modest black tank underneath.
Oh yeah, and a scowl.
So the Princess left for the Ball.
And it was bad.
Bad dancing. (Think Elaine from Seinfeld)
Bad music. (YMCA again?)
Bad food. (Store bought cookies still in their plastic cases)
Bad. Bad. Bad.
Here is where some well-meaning older adult would tell me that “Fun is an attitude, not an event” and I would punch them in the throat.
Or at least sigh and roll my eyes.
Did I mention that even though I had learned who I was, I was still dealing with some issues?
I felt like the girl that gets invited to a party because the birthday-girl’s mother made her. Everyone acts like they want the girl there, but she knows the truth.
Honestly, the people at my church were probably quite nice, but I was really insecure. I was trying to reject them before they had a chance to reject me.
And it was working out quite well. Thankyouverymuch.
I was standing by the table of chocolate chip cookies and red punch when someone introduced me to Mr. Frantic. He was newly returned from serving a two-year mission.
A mission where he did not date or even flirt with girls. Where he did not watch tv. Or listen to the radio. Or read anything other than scripture and scripture commentary.
He devoted every waking minute to God’s work for two years.
The poor guy had been home for less than a week and he was feeling really awkward at his “reentry” into real life.
I could have been gracious. I could have helped him to feel welcome and comfortable. But before I could say a word, the thought went through my mind, “I wonder if this is the guy I’ll end up marrying?”
I have to tell you, I was not in the habit of thinking about marriage.
I was nineteen for heaven sake!
I had plans. Plans that included moving away from my parent’s home. Travel. Finishing up at the local community college and moving on the university. Preferably one far away.
And not BYU.
My plans did not include getting married anytime soon. Nope. Not me.
And so that little matrimonial thought poisoned me against my new acquaintance. I barely spoke to him. We each came away from that first encounter with a less than favorable impression of the other.
I thought he was annoying. He thought I was obnoxious.
Can’t you see how the seeds of love were planted?
Me either.

Part 2

At this time in my life I was busy pursuing both a fine education (general studies at the local community college) and a career (customer service rep at Circuit City). On Sundays I attended a college ward (LDS terminology alert: ward = congregation) for young singles. It was not really going well. Remember how I mentioned that I had a bit of an attitude? To my intense surprise, my prickly personality had not won me any friends. I was considering whether I should continue going there or go back to my parents’ ward (snore).
Politically incorrect sidenote: Growing up, it was the standard joke that all of the people in my parents’ ward were either short, fat or mentally impaired. Thankfully, I’m only 5’1″.
One afternoon at work I received my schedule and noticed that I was supposed to work the following Sunday afternoon. That meant that I would be unable to attend either ward. But I really did want to go to church. By a series of odd coincidences I ended up in a ward way across town. I had never been there and didn’t know anyone that attended there, but it met in the morning and I could go and still get to work on time. So I went.
I sat in the back, feeling slightly awkward. A few people smiled at me but I didn’t know what to say so I buried my head in the program. Hmmm…I noticed a familiar name. That one guy from the dance, my future husb- shut up! would be speaking that day – reporting back on his mission.
A I listened to him speak I realized that he was really a nice guy. And he seemed so confident, so sure of himself, which was exactly the opposite of what I felt. I felt bad for being so snotty to him when we met.
After the service, he saw me leaving the chapel. He caught up to me a grabbed me by the hand.
“Heidi, what are you doing here? Do you go to this ward?”
“Um, no I have to work this afternoon and- actually it’s really a long, boring story. I liked your talk. Welcome home.”
I guess he was excited to see a young familiar face. He dragged me over to meet his family: his parents and older brother. I really didn’t mind, they seemed nice. I felt strange. What was this feeling? The opposite of awkward, comfortable…
The next Sunday I went back to my college ward.
I walked in and no one said hello.
I sat in the back, alone.
What was I doing there?
I said a quick, sort of demanding silent prayer.

Hey, Heavenly Father?
I’m here because I thought this might be where you wanted me to be. And yes, I admit I haven’t tried quite as hard as I should, but still…I’ve been coming for months and I’m not even sure the bishop knows my name, let alone any of the people my age. I’ve committed to follow you, and I will. I know it won’t always be easy, but I can’t take much more of this. If you want me here you’ve got to throw me a bone. Here’s what I need: a friend. Just one would be enough. Oh, and I’d like to feel like I belong here please. Today. Or I’m never coming back. I guess I’ll join all the short/fat/impaired people and my parents…

Before I could finish the bishop came up and said, “Heidi, I’ve been meaning to talk to you. Could you meet me in my office after church for a few minutes? I’d like to get to know you better.”
“Um, okay.”
And then that guy from the dance walked in and said, “Why are you sitting here all alone? Come sit with me and my friends.” So I did.
That day I met his friend, J. J was nice and cute. So of course I said yes when he asked me out. Could be fun, right?

Stay tuned…